To elucidate the effects surface capping and defects in the anisotropic growth of metal nanocrystals, the work presented here combines synthetic methods and electrochemical measurements to reveal the roles of citrate in the growth of seeds with different structures.7 The single-crystal Ag seeds (Figure 1A) grow into cuboctahedra in the absence of citrate (Figure 1B) and octahedra in the presence of citrate (Figure 1C), which closely matches the shape prediction from the electrochemical measurements. Linear sweep voltammetry (LSV) measurements under the synthetic conditions demonstrate the anisotropic growth with citrate is a result of citrate selectively suppressing the oxidation of a reducing agent, ascorbic acid, and citrate does not affect silver ion reduction. The Ag nanoplate seeds with planar defects (Figure 1D) undergo isotropic growth in the absence of citrate (Figure 1E), but exhibit 30~100 times more anisotropic growth in the presence of citrate than the single-crystal seeds and electrochemical prediction (Figure 1F). Further investigation suggests planar defects can catalyze silver atom deposition to the nanoplate side planes and citrate suppresses surface diffusion to the nanoplate basal planes.
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